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Saturday, January 14, 2012

ÅKERFELDT/WILSON Collaboration: New Photos Posted Online

Several new photos of STORM CORROSION, the much-anticipated collaboration project between OPETH's Mikael Åkerfeldt and PORCUPINE TREE's Steven Wilson, can be seen below.

STORM CORROSION last year completed work on its self-titled debut album for an April 2012 release through Roadrunner Records. Apart from Mikael and Steven, the CD includes guest appearances by Gavin Harrison (PORCUPINE TREE) on drums/percussion, Ben Castle on woodwinds and Dave Stewart on string arrangements.

In a interview with Metal Injection conducted on November 11 at the Best Buy Theater in New York City, Wilson was asked how STORM CORROSION is different from his previous collaborations with Åkerfeldt. "Well, the only stuff I've collaborated with Mikael on in the past has been working on his records," Wilson replied. "This is obviously a collaboration, so it's a differentapproach. We sat in a room together and we wrote music together, ratherthan taking his music that he'd already written and working it into arecord. We actually started from the very basics — composition andarranging."

He continued, "If you'd asked me three months agoabout the music, I would have said, 'Expect the last thing you wouldexpect.' But actually, now that [OPETH's new record] 'Heritage' has come out and [Steven Wilson's solo album] 'Grace Of Drowning' has come out, I don't think it's going to be that much of a shock topeople, because it's almost like a third part of the trilogy, in a way.If anything, it's even more orchestral, even more stripped down, evenmore dark, twisted and melancholic… but it certainly feels like it comes from the same place as 'Heritage' and 'Grace For Drowning', which indeed it does because it was written during the same period — it was written during a period that he was playing the tracks that he'dwritten for 'Heritage' and I was playing the tracks that I had written for 'Grace Of Drowning'. So we were kind of, in a way, egging each other on, encouraging eachother to do those particular records, but also at the same time comingup with this music that is now gonna be on STORM CORROSION. Soit's a very orchestral record, it's very — as you'd expect — epic, thesongs are quite long and they develop in quite unusual ways."

Heconcluded, "I'm realistic that half the people are gonna hate it andhalf the people probably will fall in love with it. I'd be happy withthat anyway."

Although former DREAM THEATER drummer Mike Portnoy was initially supposed to be part of the STORM CORROSION project, he did not take part in the recording sessions for the CD. "To be honest, there's just no room for drums on what we've done," Åkerfeldt told Classic Rock magazine last year. "I called Mike up, and he was cool about it. He's got so much going on anyway, and I'm sure we will work together in the future."